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Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Surgeon Says Human Body Did Not Evolve

In a recent paper titled "Dissecting Darwinism," Baylor University
Medical Center surgeon Joseph Kuhn described serious problems with
Darwinian evolution.1 He first described how life could not
possibly have come from chemicals alone, since the information residing
in DNA required an input from outside of nature.2

He then addressed Darwinism's inability to account for the
all-or-nothing structure of cellular systems, including the human body.
As a medical doctor, Kuhn not only knows the general arrangement of the
human body's visible parts, he also understands the interrelated
biochemical systems that sustain and regulate all of those parts. He
recognized that the human body contains an all-or-nothing system in
which its core parts and biochemicals must exist all at once for the
body to function.

Biochemist Michael Behe named these all-or-nothing systems "irreducibly complex."3
Removing a single core part from one of these systems keeps the entire
system from working, and this implies that the system was initially
built with all of its parts intact.

This is exactly what researchers expect to see if God purposely created
living systems, rather than if natural processes accidentally built
living systems bit-by-bit—as Darwinian philosophy maintains.

Kuhn cited the work of another medical doctor, Geoffrey Simmons, who described 17 "all or nothing" human body systems.4
These combine with many others to form the entire human body—a system
of systems—that is irreducible at many levels, from gross anatomy to
biochemistry. For example, just as a woman would die without her heart,
she would also die without the vital blood biochemical hemoglobin.

But even an intact heart and hemoglobin need regulation. A heart that
beats too fast or too slow can be just as lethal as having no heart, and
a body that produces too much or too little hemoglobin can be equally
unhealthy. Thus, the systems that regulate heartbeats and hemoglobin
must also have been present from the beginning.